5. Chemex Coffee (invented year 1941 )
Coffee is brewed by first placing the paper filter and the ground coffee
in the neck of the flask, while heating water to 180-200°F in a
separate vessel; then "blooming" (moistening) the ground coffee, by
pouring some hot water onto the dry coffee, and finally, by pouring the
desired quantity of water (number of cups) over the ground coffee, and
awaiting it to percolate down, through the coffee and the paper filter,
into the flask
In popular of the Chemex Coffee maker: ( A little bit of add ons...)
In the 1954 romance movie Sabrina,
a Chemex Coffeemaker can be seen in the corner of Linus's bar in his
office. In spy literature, film, and television, the Chemex coffeemaker
has appeared in the novel From Russia, with Love (1957), by Ian Fleming, who describes James Bond, when in London, brewing his breakfast coffee with a Chemex, using coffee bought from the De Bry's shop in New Oxford Street.[7]
In the detective film Harper (1966), private eye Lew Harper (Paul Newman) uses a Chemex coffeemaker to brew his breakfast coffee. In the comedy Pillow Talk (1959), the interior designer Jan Morrow (Doris Day) prepares coffee with a Chemex coffeemaker. In the horror movie Rosemary's Baby
(1968), the housewife character, Rosemary (Mia Farrow), uses a Chemex
coffeemaker. In the 1961 Drama “Return to Peyton Place” Mary Astor uses a
Chemex to serve coffee to Son (Bret Halsey) and daughter (Luciana
Paluzzi)
In the television comedy programme The Mary Tyler Moore Show
(1970–77), the Mary Richards (Mary Tyler Moore) character has such a
coffeemaker in the kitchen of her apartment. Similarly, a Chemex can be
spotted on the stovetop in the pilot of "Friends" (1994)[8]
In the film Interstellar (2014), a Chemex can be seen on the dining
room table, being used to filter the dust out of drinking water.
A Chemex can be seen on the Netflix comedy series "Grace & Frankie"(2015-).
6. Aeropress Coffee ( invented year 2005 )
The AeroPress is a device for brewing coffee. It was invented in 2005 by Aerobie president Alan Adler. Coffee is steeped for 10–50 seconds (depending on grind and preferred
strength) and then forced through a filter by pressing the plunger
through the tube. The filters used are either the AeroPress paper
filters or disc shaped thin metal filters. The maker describes the result as an espresso strength concentration of coffee, but its most frequent use is more in the filter brew strength.
The device consists of two nesting cylinders. One cylinder has a
flexible airtight seal and fits inside the larger cylinder, similar to a
syringe.